
SDN-003242, Chicago Daily News negatives collection, Chicago Historical Society
The Cubs played in the ballpark you see above before they were even known as the Cubs, beginning in 1893. When the century turned, they began the greatest period of baseball dominance in team history, and one of the greatest ever by any team -- winning four pennants in five years and two World Series, and winning 104 games in the year they didn't win the pennant (1909).
After "Lucky" Charlie Weeghman bought the Cubs as one of the results of the settlement of the Federal League lawsuit, he moved them, in 1916 into the park he had built for his Federal League Chicago Whales, two years earlier. Charles Murphy, who sold the Cubs to Weeghman, kept his West Side ballpark, which would host amateur games and even the Buffalo Bill Wild West Show:

DN-0066934, Chicago Daily News negatives collection, Chicago Historical Society
In 1919, Murphy sold the park and the land to the State of Illinois for $400,000 and the stands, mostly made of wood, were sold for scrap. The state built a medical building now known as the UIC Medical Sciences Building on the site.
And for more than 90 years, there has been nothing at that location to commemorate the Cubs and baseball history that happened there a century ago.
Tomorrow, that changes. Mike Reischl and The Way Out In Left Field Society has worked for several years to try to get an historical marker remembering the history of the Cubs at West Side Grounds, and tomorrow, Saturday, September 6, there will be a dedication ceremony beginning at 10 am at 912 S. Wood in Chicago. I'm going to be there and will post some photos tomorrow afternoon. Here's Mike's explanation of how the phrase "Way Out In Left Field" originated:
The phrase "way out in left field" has evolved to mean an eccentric, odd, misguided or peculiar statement or act. Although the origin of the phrase has been challenged and debated over the years, the most logical and realistic explanation comes from an extinct baseball park called West Side Grounds that the Chicago Cubs called home from 1893 to 1915. As legend has it, a mental hospital called the Neuropsychiatric Institute was located directly behind the left field wall. The Institute housed mental patients who could be heard making strange and bizarre comments within listening distance of players and fans. Thus, if someone said that you were "way out in left field," the person was questioning your sanity and comparing you with a mental patient.
Whether you believe that or not, kudos to Mike Reischl and the Society for working hard to right this historical omission. It's way past time.
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0 recs | 39 comments
So...
Way out in left field might refer to Cubs fans too, huh? :)
Nice.
Archie - September 5, 2008
LOL
Not necessarily!
Al Yellon - September 5, 2008
Don't you usually sit in left field, Al?
:) hehehehehe
Jettero2112 - September 5, 2008
LMAO
But not WAY out in left field!
Al Yellon - September 5, 2008
Oh, that's ballhawk?
N Oakley - September 5, 2008
so would people on the rooftops be WAAAY out in left field
considering how much rooftops cost for some games I could see that.
mjk83 - September 5, 2008
Yeah...
exactly my thinking….lol
crw89 - September 5, 2008
I dunno
you sit about as far out in left as you can possibly get!
drewishdrewid - September 5, 2008
Second!
Cool pics!
MikeOxbyg - September 5, 2008
That Wild West Show
looks like where Marty McFly prepped to travel back to 1885.
daeviant - September 5, 2008
Interesting Stuff
I especially liked the pictures of the cub bear on the field and of Murphy in what seems to be the equivalent of a skybox back then. Look forward to the ceremony pics also.
i’ve also buzzed up
tony412 - September 5, 2008
Very cool.
I always knew the old field was on the “west” side of town, but never knew the location until this year. Can’t wait to walk by after the sign is up.
N Oakley - September 5, 2008
The picture gallerys on that website are amazing.
The “pennant raising ceremony” is a great shot.
http://bc1000.com/graphics_twoilfs/gallery06.htm
N Oakley - September 5, 2008
Thanks
Great Photos in the Gallery – be sure to look at the others (#01 – 05)
Ihatethecards - September 5, 2008
looks like a short porch in right
but they need to put up a basket to keep the hordes from jumping onto the field.
and maybe some coloration on the walls of some sort
tim815 - September 5, 2008
Holy Cow
that was funny
tony412 - September 5, 2008
Nice touch, Al...
with the exra little context to the Magic Number. Here’s hoping we see Jose Cardenal (or whoever) up there very soon.
chr15 - September 5, 2008
Showing my age and era
rlpete - September 5, 2008
Ooops meant to type 18
But a # in front caused a formatting problem.
rlpete - September 5, 2008
Yeah, so do I.
Which is why I chose a different player.
Al Yellon - September 5, 2008
Very nice Al...
need a little history lesson to get my mind off our pitching staff woes, thx
crw89 - September 5, 2008
only regret
The only regret about the West Side grounds was that they never won a World Series on their home field. Both clinchers came at Detroit. Does anybody know if there is a plaque for Bennett Park in Detroit? I’d like to go there and stand next to the place where the Cubs won the Series!!
KedzieKid - September 5, 2008
that's interesting
taking it a step further I wondered..obviously the white sox won the 1906 world series in chicago(beating the cubs), but what about ’17 and ’05? The AL had homefield advantage in ’05 and the Sox swept, winning the clinching game in Houston. In 1917 the Sox beat the giants 4-2, winning the clinching game at Polo Grounds in NY.
the only time a Chicago team has clinched a world series championship in chicago was in 1906 when it was a city series
mjk83 - September 5, 2008
Great work and a small correction
Murphy didn’t sell the Cubs to Weegham. Murphy sold control of the team in 1914 to Charles P. Taft, who had been bankrolling Murphy the whole time.
Taft, who was the half-brother of the former president, had absolutely no interest in owning a baseball team, and only bought the Cubs as a favor to the other owners, who were sick of “Chubby Charlie” Murphy and wanted him out of the game.
As a Cub owner, Taft was the Sam Zell of his era, owning the team only with the purpose to sell it. Taft was only too happy to sell to Weegham as a condition of ending the war with the Federal League.
Josh Timmers - September 5, 2008
Anyone have a guess as to what is happening in the top pic?
It looks like the visiting team has just hit a two run homer. Anyone? Anyone?
Weeghman Park - September 5, 2008
Is that Howry walking off the mound?
Weeghman Park - September 5, 2008
Ha, ha!
zevkalman - September 5, 2008
Could be...
..his great grand father. I’ll bet he only had one pitch as well.
MPH73 - September 5, 2008
Al, the buzz is in the upper right hand corner
Not way out in left :)
GoCubbies34 - September 5, 2008
The Left Field legend
As a UIC grad (MSME 1985), I’d heard that “Out of Left Field” explanation before. Makes sense to me.
Thanks for posting this, Al.
thermal54 - September 5, 2008
Also...
…the photo of the cattle and horses made me LOL at my desk. I dunno, reminded me of “Blazing Saddles” maybe. Heh.
thermal54 - September 5, 2008
'Scuse me while I whip this out!
willie mays hayes' gloves - September 5, 2008
Camptown ladies sing this song...
N Oakley - September 5, 2008
I think it's "sing dis song"
Rock Ridge! Rock Ridge!
Weeghman Park - September 5, 2008
Mongo only pawn in game of life.
willie mays hayes' gloves - September 5, 2008
"I get no kick from champagne."
Weeghman Park - September 5, 2008
TWHS
tony412 - September 5, 2008
'laurel and hardy'
handshakes all around
tim815 - September 5, 2008
Was that the funniest movie ever made when it came out?...
Weeghman Park - September 5, 2008
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